Reason Overview3. Reason Overview

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Reason Overview3 In this chapter we ll take a quick look around the Reason interface and get an overview of what working in Reason will be like. If Reason is your first music studio, chances are the interface looks to you like a mad scientist s lab. Don t panic; this chapter will help you get your lab in order before starting to create your first monster project. Reason Overview 29

Chapter 3 Getting Around in Reason The first thing you ll see when you launch Reason is the Tutorial Song (Figure 3.1). Anytime you have Reason running, you re looking at a song the Reason file format. We ll use the Tutorial Song to see and hear what Reason instruments sound and look like, and to see how music looks after it s recorded. The Tutorial Song is a typical finished Reason project, with stacks of knob-plastered devices and a host of music tracks. Getting Around in Reason Figure 3.1 The Tutorial Song 30

Introduction to the Rack and Sequencer Reason Overview The Reason interface has two windows: One reads music, and the other one plays it. The lower window is your writing workspace and is called the Sequencer. Think of it as sheet music. The upper window, your studio, is called the Rack. It plays the notes and makes the sound your orchestra (albeit a shiny modular one with lots of knobs!). The Sequencer and Rack are invisibly connected and work together. Start a new song by setting up the Rack. It s a one-step process, and you ll build your studio one instrument at a time as you write, adding more gear as it s needed. The Rack can be as complex or simple as you want it to be; it s up to you. For now, let s look at the Rack used by the Tutorial Song (Figure 3.2). Getting Around in Reason 31

Chapter 3 Reason hardware interface (input/output device) Mixer Reverb (effect) Delay (effect) Synthesizer (SubTractor #1) Drum machine (Redrum) Synthesizer (SubTractor #2) Distortion (effect) Getting Around in Reason Sequencer device (plays Rack instruments) Loop player Sampler Synthesizer (SubTractor #3) Distortion (effect) Sequencer #2 Synthesizer (Malström) Sequencer #3 Transport control bar Figure 3.2 The Tutorial Rack 32

To play a song in Reason: Reason Overview 1. To listen to the song, press the spacebar, or click the play button on the transport bar at the bottom of the screen, under the Sequencer (Figure 3.3). As the song plays, a position bar scrolls from left to right in the Sequencer. 2. To stop the song, press the spacebar again or click the stop button on the transport bar. Stop Play Figure 3.3 The transport bar s play button Getting Around in Reason 33

Chapter 3 Meet the Mixer Now look at the Rack (top window) to see the Mixer (Figure 3.4). From the Mixer you can control the volume levels of all the instruments that are playing in the song. Each vertical strip on the Mixer represents the sound coming from a particular instrument, and represents a mixer audio channel. As the song plays, signal levels go up and down on the channel indicators. The Mixer funnels all these channels into one stereo sound coming through your speakers. Getting Around in Reason Figure 3.4 The Rack Mixer 34

Reason Overview Mute Solo Fader Figure 3.5 Moving channel faders To use the Mixer: 1. With a song playing, move the channel fader on the Mixer up and down to change the volume for an instrument (Figure 3.5). 2. Hit the Solo button on a Mixer channel to hear that channel by itself. You can solo as many channels as you want Solo just mutes the un-soloed channels. 3. Hit the Mute button to silence a channel. (Solo overrides mute; you don t have to unmute in order to solo.) Getting Around in Reason 35

Chapter 3 The Reason Work Process For a typical project in Reason, you ll create a Mixer, add a device such as a drum machine or a synth, record the parts, listen to them, edit them, add more devices or parts as needed, fine-tune them, add effects, arrange the tracks, mix the song, master the final version, and save the results as an audio file that can be burned to an audio CD. Here s what the process can look like in slightly more detail: For a brief setup, start with a Mixer. The Mixer is where the instruments in your studio (such as a drum machine or a synthesizer) plug in so that you can hear them (more on this in Chapter 4, Getting Started ). Once the Mixer is created, all the instruments will plug into it automatically (Figure 3.6). The Reason Work Process Figure 3.6 A basic setup using a Mixer and a drum machine 36

Reason Overview Write a music track. Create your first instrument; then move to the Sequencer window to write and edit the instrument s part (discussed in Chapter 4). Input the notes using a typical music keyboard, or just use your mouse. Working on one track at a time, you ll add some notes, play them back, and move on to the next track (Figure 3.7). Add another instrument and repeat the process. continues on next page The Reason Work Process Figure 3.7 Write a drum track using the Sequencer. 37

Chapter 3 Mix sparingly. After two or more parts are written, you ll start adjusting the balance between the parts (Figure 3.8). Keep the mix rough, though every added instrument changes the way the other instruments sound against one another. The real mixing work comes at the end (more on this in Chapter 10, Arranging and Mixing ). Tweak some knobs. Once you have your basic tracks, it s time to experiment with the knobs and control levers on your instruments (Figure 3.9). Later you may decide to write knob movements during recording; we ll get to this in Chapter 6, Working with Samplers. You can even input pinpoint-accurate controller tracks in your track, using the Pencil tool (Figure 3.10). Figure 3.8 Balance instrument levels in the Mixer. The Reason Work Process Preset Sounds: The Factory Sound Bank You can make music in Reason without ever touching a control knob, using instrument presets from Reason s Factory Sound Bank. Audition or switch sounds during playback using Reason s redesigned patch browser. You ll use these patches to start exploring the different instruments, and learn how to tweak the controls to make your own patches later. Figure 3.9 Create exact volume changes for a synthesizer. Figure 3.10 Quickly record synth knob movements directly in the Rack. 38

Reason Overview Add effects. After recording and tweaking, you ll want to experiment with some effects (more on this in Chapter 8, Effects ). Creating effects works just like creating instruments (Figure 3.11). And Reason s effects can do much more than add ambience they can help you finalize a mix, bring instruments to the forefront, or make crazy otherworldly sounds with just a tiny bit of experimenting. Arrange tracks. Don t like your song the way it is? Move parts around, repeat sections, or add breaks and additional ornamental parts easily in Reason s Arrange view in the Sequencer (discussed in Chapter 10). Arrange view lets you shuffle parts, move or repeat song sections, and polish the overall construction of the song (Figure 3.12). Figure 3.11 Add effects devices. Figure 3.12 Drag selected sections from three adjacent tracks to a new location. The Reason Work Process 39

Chapter 3 Fine-tune the mix. Zero in on your final version by fine-tuning the mix without fussing with your instrument sounds. Make adjustments to the tone and balance of your tracks easily using Reason s powerful tone equalizing tools (EQs). Master your song. Use Reason s MClass mastering tools to smooth out or boost the levels of your tracks and optimize them for CD. Fine-tune the overall EQ, adjust the stereo spread, or add compression. Make the final version jump out in an audition by making it as loud as it can be without distortion. Burn your music to CD and test it out. Pop out multiple versions of your song as separate.wav files (Figure 3.13) and burn them to CD (more on this in Chapter 11, Mastering Your Music ). Wrap up. Burn a CD. Figure 3.13 Export a song as an audio file. The Reason Work Process 40

Reason Overview Figure 3.14 Detach the Sequencer window. Switching Windows Working with Reason will involve a lot of switching between the Rack and the Sequencer windows. Switching is faster when they are detached. To detach the windows: From the Windows menu, select Detach Sequencer Window (Figure 3.14). Or click the Detach button at the top-right of the Rack window. Now you can see more in both windows, or move your Sequencer to another second monitor. Switch between them by clicking the window you want, or choosing it from the Windows menu. Faster still, hitting Ctrl+Tab in Windows switches you between the Rack and Sequencer; on a Mac, Cmd+1 brings up the Rack and Cmd+2 moves to the Sequencer. Switching Windows 41

Chapter 3 What s in the Sequencer? Let s look at where you will write tracks, or parts (Figure 3.15). The Sequencer window starts off with an overview of all the tracks in the song (the Arrange view). The Rack instruments are listed in the left column, and the parts are to the right. Arrange view lets you drag parts around and decide how you want them all to fit together. The instrument column lets you create new tracks (you can send more than one track to the same instrument) or switch devices for a given track. Toolbar Arrange window (shows notes on all tracks) View buttons Switching Windows Instrument track list (shows devices being played) Transport bar (playback controls) Figure 3.15 The Sequencer in Arrange mode 42

Reason Overview What Is a Sequencer? Anything that can store a series of notes and then read them back is a sequencer. One low-tech analogy for a sequencer is a player piano holding sheet music. A sequencer does both tasks. It stores the parts and then plays them back. The Rack is the piano that makes the sound. When you write in the Reason Sequencer window, you are essentially writing a score to be performed; you re not creating the actual musical performance. The music is not created until the Sequencer sends your score to the Rack, where your instruments perform it. The advantage of Reason over our low-tech player-piano example is that any performance can be sent to any instrument. Want to hear how that bass line sounds playing a vocal sample? Send the same performance to a different instrument with just a click of the mouse. MIDI: Computer Music Notation Your Reason Sequencer speaks a language called MIDI (musical instrument digital interface). It records nuances of a performance without storing the actual sound, keeping track of note on, note off, note length, note strength, and more. If you are using an external music keyboard to control Reason, chances are you re sending MIDI data into Reason via a five-pin MIDI cable. For now, don t worry too much about the MIDI language because Reason translates it for you, in much the same way that Microsoft Word handles the code when you type a letter. (To learn how to import and export MIDI files into and out of Reason, see Chapter 10.) Switching Windows 43

Chapter 3 The Sequencer Edit Mode Edit mode is where you get in close and tell an instrument what to play. Unless you use alternative Rack sequencing (see Chapter 7, Patterning ), Edit mode is where you ll spend most of your writing time. To use Edit mode: 1. In the Sequencer, select the seventh track down ( Rhodes ) in the left column of the Tutorial Song. 2. Click the Edit mode display button in the upper-left corner (Figure 3.16) to look at the track, or press Alt+Tab (Win)/ Ctrl+Cmd+E (Mac). You should now see a graph showing the notes in Track 7 (Rhodes), arranged on a grid (Figure 3.17). Figure 3.16 The Edit mode display button The Sequencer Edit Mode Figure 3.17 A track displayed in Edit mode 44

Reason Overview 3. If necessary, use the scroll bar at the side of the window to scroll up or down and see the notes, or resize your Sequencer window. 4. Move your cursor over the keyboard ruler at the left margin of the track display; when the cursor changes to a speaker icon, click the mouse to audition notes (Figure 3.18). 5. To see more or less of the track, use the zoom buttons. Vertical zoom is at the upper-right (Figure 3.19) and horizontal zoom is at the lower-left (Figure 3.20). Figure 3.18 Audition notes on the keyboard ruler. continues on next page Figure 3.19 The vertical zoom buttons Figure 3.20 The horizontal zoom buttons The Sequencer Edit Mode 45

Chapter 3 6. Hit the play button on the transport bar (or press the spacebar) to watch the track play. You ll see the display scroll to the right as the song advances. Longer notes sustain (Figure 3.21) and short notes are staccato (Figure 3.22). Soft notes appear in a lighter shade of red than those played very hard and loudly (Figure 3.23). 7. Look below the note grid, and you ll see red vertical bars arranged under the notes. This is the Velocity lane; the bars represent the strength of the attack, or velocity, for each note. Tip Velocity is a note s speed of attack, not its volume. (Volume is another parameter that has its own controls.) If you re not sure what the difference is, see the sidebar Velocity vs. Volume. Weak note Figure 3.21 A sustained note Figure 3.22 A staccato (short) note The Sequencer Edit Mode Velocity vs. Volume Velocity is relative note strength and volume is instrument level. The term velocity comes from the way music keyboards keep track of how hard the performer is hitting a note. Though a piano responds directly to finger pressure, an electronic keyboard only measures how fast a key is struck, or how quickly the key moves between a high and a low sensor when played. Measuring a key s speed is an economical and stable alternative to measuring pressure, because it minimizes the number of potential moving parts that can wear out; and speed is just as accurate as pressure as an indicator of the strength of note attack. Figure 3.23 Strong vs. light notes Strong note 46

Figure 3.24 Click the Show Controller Lane button. Show All Controllers button Controller lane Figure 3.25 The Controller lane Introducing Controllers Now that you ve looked closely at a track of music in Reason, let s go deeper and get a glimpse into one of Reason s most powerful features: control over instruments. You can actually record nearly any movement of any knob, lever, or button on a Rack device. The movements are stored in the instrument s Sequencer track and then get sent to the Rack during playback. If you want to see what controller information looks like in a track, you must first tell Reason to display it. To view Controller lanes: Reason Overview 1. Make sure your Sequencer is in Edit mode. 2. Click the Show Controller Lane button at the top of the Sequencer window (Figure 3.24). This adds the Controller lane to the bottom of the Sequencer and activates the three controller buttons at the top of the window (Figure 3.25). (For details on controller lane editing, see Controller Automation in Chapter 6.) Introducing Controllers 47

Chapter 3 The Back of the Rack Reason has the potential to get very complicated when you know enough to get greedy about piling up Rack gear. What if you forget how all your devices are hooked up? What if you run out of Mixer channels? There s a whole other Rack view that we haven t explored it s the back panel view showing how each device is connected. To see the back of the Rack: 1. With the Rack window active, press Tab. Voilà! You can see all the cables (Figure 3.26). 2. Hold your mouse cursor over one end of a cable; after a short delay, a tool tip pops up, telling you where the other end of the cable is plugged in. The Back of the Rack Figure 3.26 The Rack s rear panel 48

Reason Overview If you haven t tinkered much with real music hardware, this back view may look like spaghetti. Just remember that you ll add the Rack devices one at a time as you build up the tracks of your own song, and Reason takes care of most of the cabling for you. The back panel really sets Reason apart from other music software: Reason instruments function just like real studio gear you can hook them up any way you want, and the cables are easy and fast to move! (And you will never have to crawl behind a patch bay in a cramped studio while holding a flashlight in your teeth.) So if you are using Reason for the first time, take heart. Reason automatically takes care of the rear panel for you in the same way it handles controllers: You don t have to mess with it if you don t want to. Doing your own cabling is easy, and you can do some amazing things by cabling instruments and effects to one another. For a few samples of what can be done, see Chapter 9, Cabling Setups. The Back of the Rack 49

Chapter 3 Understanding Control Voltage (CV) Understanding Control Voltage (CV) Now that we know the difference between audio signals and MIDI signals, let s talk about the other kind of signal that Reason uses extensively: control voltage. Control voltage (CV) is an electronics term that refers to the way synthesizers communicated in the days before MIDI and computer technology. Before computers and digital language, synthesizers used electronic control voltages to relay anything from knob movements to note on and note off messages. Synthesizers were well established when computers arrived, so the new digital instruments were designed to fit the established electronic conventions. As you start working with synthesizers, you ll become familiar with lots of electronic synth terms, such as envelope, filter, resonance, LFO, and others. 50

Reason Overview Figure 3.27 Change the Preferences to get rid of the Tutorial Song. Getting Rid of the Tutorial Song Now that you ve had a basic tour of the Reason interface, it s time to get rid of the Tutorial Song so you can start your first project! To get rid of the Tutorial Song: 1. Select Edit > Preferences (Win)/ Reason > Preferences (Mac). 2. Under Default Song, select Empty Rack (Figure 3.27). 3. Close the Preferences dialog box and close the Tutorial Song Rack window. 4. Select File > New. A new, empty Rack and Sequencer open, and you re ready to start your first song from scratch. Getting Rid of the Tutorial Song 51